1 Society, Resistance and Revolution: the Budapest Middle Class and the Hungarian Communist State 1948-1956 Accounts of resistance to Communist states have dominated the historiographies of central-eastern European countries since 1989. The anti-Stalinist protests in Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, peasant opposition to collectivization and the dissident „civil society‟ movements of the 1980s have become the most popular research topics. In addition, left-wing dissidents, the catholic church and conservative nationalists have used resistance stories to establish themselves as anti-Communist fighters in the popular consciousness. 1 The idealization of resistance has meant that even inter-war and wartime rightist leaders of the 1930s and 1940s have been openly celebrated as national heroes for attempting to prevent the occupation of their countries by the Red Army, despite their involvement in the Holocaust. 2 This celebration of dissent was in part a reaction to the silences of the Communist historiographies which preceded it. 3 Yet as different groups have sought political respectability by placing themselves at the forefront of anti- Communist opposition, so the post-Communist estimation of resistance has developed beyond its actual historical scale. 4 Despite widespread dislike of Communist regimes by the early 1950s, there was in fact very little concerted political resistance. Well-known outbreaks, such as the 1956 uprising in Hungary or the Solidarity movement in Poland, were remarkable exceptions. Historians and political scientists have usually resorted to „top down‟ explanations to explain the absence; this is especially true of the 1950s in central-eastern Europe, where
50
Embed
Society, Resistance and Revolution: the Budapest Middle Class … · 3 Conservatives, who abhorred the Communist state more than any other group, saw engagement, even in the form
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
1
Society, Resistance and Revolution: the Budapest Middle Class and the Hungarian
Communist State 1948-1956
Accounts of resistance to Communist states have dominated the historiographies of
central-eastern European countries since 1989. The anti-Stalinist protests in Poland,
Hungary and Czechoslovakia, peasant opposition to collectivization and the dissident
„civil society‟ movements of the 1980s have become the most popular research topics. In
addition, left-wing dissidents, the catholic church and conservative nationalists have used
resistance stories to establish themselves as anti-Communist fighters in the popular
consciousness.1 The idealization of resistance has meant that even inter-war and wartime
rightist leaders of the 1930s and 1940s have been openly celebrated as national heroes for
attempting to prevent the occupation of their countries by the Red Army, despite their
involvement in the Holocaust.2 This celebration of dissent was in part a reaction to the
silences of the Communist historiographies which preceded it.3 Yet as different groups
have sought political respectability by placing themselves at the forefront of anti-
Communist opposition, so the post-Communist estimation of resistance has developed
beyond its actual historical scale.4
Despite widespread dislike of Communist regimes by the early 1950s, there was in fact
very little concerted political resistance. Well-known outbreaks, such as the 1956
uprising in Hungary or the Solidarity movement in Poland, were remarkable exceptions.
Historians and political scientists have usually resorted to „top down‟ explanations to
explain the absence; this is especially true of the 1950s in central-eastern Europe, where
2
brutal Stalinist states made effective opposition difficult. According to these accounts,
only when the state weakened – owing to political infighting between hardliners and
moderates in the period of de-Stalinization, or after the signing of human rights protocols
with the West in the mid-1970s – did greater possibilities for resistance develop. Yet
these analyses too often assume that a society in opposition will always combat the state
given sufficient opportunities.5 Much less attention has been paid to the range of
strategies that social groups used in order to survive under illegitimate power and the
varied (and often ambivalent) attitudes they held towards the expression of resistance.6
This article will explore the variety of attitudes towards, and expressions of, opposition
by the Budapest middle classes, in their encounter with the Communist state between its
inception in 1948 and its initial breakdown in the 1956 uprising.7 Most members of the
middle classes experienced discrimination and persecution on account of their class
background.8 Even those who had been initially sympathetic to the Communist project
were questioning their allegiance and turning against the state by the early 1950s. Yet the
middle class did not express their opposition to the regime in uniform ways; some
engaged in active opposition whilst others deliberately withdrew from direct political
confrontation.
The choice to resist was not dependent on the degree to which different groups felt
opposed to Communism, but rather on the extent to which they thought it appropriate to
engage politically with illegitimate power. The codes which defined acceptable levels of
engagement were shaped by different political traditions within the middle class.
3
Conservatives, who abhorred the Communist state more than any other group, saw
engagement, even in the form of resistance, as collaboration with an illegitimate regime.
Liberals, by contrast, saw political involvement, albeit at the margins of Communist
society, as crucial to their identities. Socialists had the most complex attitudes to
engagement: they withdrew from political opposition when their dislike of the Stalinist
state was at its most intense, but engaged in open political struggle when the re-
establishment of the integrity of the Communist movement became a realistic possibility
after 1953.
The evidence is primarily drawn from an oral history project in which I interviewed
seventy-six individuals from the Budapest middle class, born between 1907 and 1938,
about their experiences of the Second World War, the liberation era and the early
Communist state. These interviews addressed not only resistance, but also topics such as
private life, educational and professional attainment, and the evolution of political
attitudes. They were conducted between 1998 and 2000 and averaged around three hours
in length. There were thirty-one female and forty-five male respondents. All interviewees
were promised anonymity; hence all names used are pseudonyms.
This article focuses on how individuals responded to Communist power and how they
interpreted their behaviour. Hence it is not useful to impose any strict criteria on what
resistance entails; rather, it is more informative to explore the conflicting definitions
offered by the respondents themselves. For this reason, any act, from listening to jazz in
private or discussing the behaviour of Red Army soldiers amongst groups of friends, to
4
establishing an anti-Communist organization or engaging in sabotage, will be considered
resistance so long as it was consciously pursued as such. At the same time, it is also
important to analyse those acts which undermined the norms of Communist behaviour,
even when not defined as resistance by respondents. It is revealing to examine why
certain forms of opposition were not considered to be resistance; certainly, they should
not be ignored because they were not consciously defined as such.
The importance of political tradition in shaping behaviour under the Communist state was
the result of deep ideological divisions within Hungarian society. After the First World
War, middle-class Hungarians‟ life chances were increasingly shaped by their political
beliefs: the short-lived Communist regime of 1919 inflicted terror on the right; the
subsequent right-wing authoritarian Horthy regime then excluded the left-wing and
Jewish middle class from public service employment and political power throughout the
inter-war period; the wartime German occupation and subsequent Hungarian fascist
regime further terrorized the politically active left and Jews; the post-war anti-fascist
popular front subsequently denied large sections of the conservative middle class the
right either to vote or to return to public employment. By the end of the Second World
War, these political divides were reinforced by social and religious divisions within the
middle class; the public sector was dominated by those from conservative Christian
gentry backgrounds who had been promoted by Horthy, whereas a more heterogeneous
entrepreneurial and professional middle class (which included many from Jewish
backgrounds9) was mainly liberal-left in political outlook. Thus in the decades which
5
preceded the Communist take-over, middle-class Hungarians‟ lives had been moulded as
much by their political allegiances as by their social background.
The conservative middle class was more deeply opposed to the Communist state than any
other of these groups. Hungarian conservatism itself had grown out of a fear of radical
left-wing upheaval; many had been drawn to the right-wing authoritarianism of the
Horthy era out of a fear of Soviet Bolshevism and the return of the Hungarian
Communist regime.10
Their experience of the Second World War reinforced this view;
most conservatives had supported their country‟s alliance with Nazi Germany and fight
against the Soviet Union, and came to understand the war as the struggle of Christian,
conservative Europe against a barbarous eastern Bolshevism. In the late 1940s,
conservatives ignored the progressive policies that attracted some of their countrymen to
radical left-wing ideology; rather, Communism was understood as an alien political force
which had destroyed the Hungarian nation and victimized its people.
Despite their opposition, conservatives were the group least likely to engage in acts of
resistance against the Communist regime. Explanations for an absence of dissent have
often centred on the political impossibility of active opposition given the effectiveness of
the state security apparatus, especially during the Stalinist period between 1948 and
1953.11
Conservative interviewees themselves held this view; Franciska suggested that
even the smallest public expression of opposition might incur dire penalties. Her father,
who had been a high-ranking officer in Horthy‟s army, clashed with a prominent
Communist politician when he failed to cancel an event which coincided with a party
6
rally. Fearing the consequences of this act, he employed extreme measures to avoid being
caught by the police, and became paranoid when friends offered him assistance:
Franciska: I think it was 1948 when he [her father] got into trouble
with one of the secretaries of state, who made a visit to
our town. There was a big horse breeding fête, and the
Communists wanted to hold a rally at the same time…
and my father said that he couldn't do anything about it.
And then he knew that politically he was in such an awful
situation because he could be arrested any time, for any
reason, or just simply he could have been suspended and
put in prison because he was opposing the regime. So he
was in hiding most of the time. During the day he came
home, in the evening he disappeared. He wouldn‟t come
home until about three o'clock in the morning, because he
was so afraid of the secret police. That was the time when
they arrested people in the early hours of the night. Every
evening he went to the same pub and they would signal to
him when they saw the police coming in, and he would
go out the back…it was always on his mind, that you
could be arrested for no reason…just because your family
had a pub, or your family had land or whatever, or for
simply no reason at all…he didn't talk about it, but I
7
knew that it was always on his mind…one evening, my
school friend said [to him], „you can‟t go home on your
motorbike; we will take you home!‟ But he didn't really
know them, so he said, „Na! You have got me now! Na!
You will get me now!‟ It was always on his mind. „You
are going to arrest me‟…
Certainly these respondents had suffered from greater discrimination than any other
middle-class group. Those from conservative backgrounds were much more likely to be
sidelined in post-war public life. Procedures were set up between 1945 and 1947 to
exclude those who actively collaborated with the fascist state from returning to public
employment or voting, but these were soon used to marginalize a wide swathe of
conservative opinion.12
After 1948, the newly-established Communist state barred
individuals from secondary or higher education, expropriated property or deported
families13
on account of their affiliation with the Horthy regime and their „reactionary‟
political views. This marginalization convinced many conservatives of their political
impotence. They increasingly saw themselves as helpless victims of power.
However, fear of further persecution was not the only reason conservatives chose not to
fight; in addition, they understood resistance to be a form of collaboration that
dishonoured the individual involved. The idea of dissent as shameful was most clearly
illustrated by those few conservatives who accidentally found themselves confronting the
state. One man, who described himself as a „reactionary‟, had become involved in street
8
fighting with Communist vigilantes in the early 1950s. He did not use the story to present
himself as a heroic resister. Rather, he described how the conflict had been unwanted and
unintended (he was drunk), had left him feeling ashamed and had confirmed his decision
to withdraw from a political life:
Dezső: …Now that involves hooliganism…we were fairly drunk
on May 1st, which is a day of vigilance for Communists.
Imre [his friend] started to throw bricks at lamps, and we
did this because we knew the Communist vigilantes were
there. Three of them from different sides of the street
started to rush towards us, and the three of us „went in
four different directions‟…So it wasn‟t bravado, it wasn‟t
a sort of conscious heroic opposition to the regime. In a
sense one was ashamed of it, it didn‟t really matter
somehow…I certainly didn‟t feel that I was fighting the
Communists, I didn‟t feel that at all. And had you asked
me at any point, I would have said, no, no, no, I‟m an
observer.
James: So why do you think you saw yourself as an observer at
the time?
9
Dezső: Well, the feeling that it has nothing to do with me, it was,
you know, imposed on me and the whole of Hungarian
society from without. Essentially you can‟t do anything
about it.
Resistance was shameful because of its political nature. Conservatives presented
themselves as alienated from politics from 1945 onwards.14
According to Magda, „right
from then, beginning in April 1945, from the beginning of the system, we had a feeling of
being opposed (ellenséges érzés).‟ The most appropriate response was then to become
apolitical; according to Ildikó, „I didn‟t have any political opinions. I mean, I was a very
strong-minded proud Hungarian woman.‟ To become political was to collaborate with the
„anti-fascist‟ liberal-left consensus of the popular front which took power following the
war. Márta stated that after 1945 her family „…didn't join any party, they hated
politicians, they didn't have any opinions, they didn't like politics, politicians were not
„termelő‟ [productive] people, at our house somebody who was termelő was a good
person‟.
They therefore avoided any activity that might bring them into political conflict with the
Communist state after 1948. They would only engage in minor private acts of dissent
which the state would not notice and which had no political meaning:
Irén: I think we only had silent weapons [my emphasis] – not
to do this or that or not to participate at certain events.
10
For instance, when we saw these red stars made out of
flowers we decided not to cross that park any more. Just
such small things, but in our family we did not really go
against the system or resist or anything, no…
Rather than resort to direct confrontation, they saw the quiet, private maintenance of pre-
Communist bourgeois and religious values as the most appropriate response to
Communist power. Church-going was particularly popular, as it allowed conservatives to
articulate their values „discreetly‟.15
However, it was crucial to them that this behaviour
should not be perceived as political resistance. In this example, Ildikó emphasized that
despite her regular church attendance, she had decided to avoid going behind the sacristy
or taking confession; thus, she would not seem to be „demonstrating‟ against the regime:
Ildikó: …I went to the church every Sunday but I didn‟t dare to
go behind the sacristy…to talk personally [with the
priest]…I didn‟t practise my religion but I went to church
every Sunday. It is not practising if I go to church.
Anybody can go to church. I just went there when there
was a mass. I didn‟t go to a confession. I didn‟t want to
demonstrate…I just went there.
Most accounts of resistance to the early Communist state focus on the period after 1953,
when a new post-Stalinist leadership in Moscow removed the hard-line Stalinist Rákosi
11
and installed the reformist Imre Nagy as prime minister. Explanations for increasing
dissent are usually „top down‟. Nagy‟s attempt to curtail the arbitrary use of state power
and to achieve a limited amount of popular legitimacy, and the political infighting
between Rákosi and Nagy which ensued, have been presented as the crucial factors that
weakened the Communist state and gave its critics increasing room to engage in effective
resistance. Yet despite greater opportunity, conservatives still viewed resistance as a form
of collaboration and refused to become involved. Dezső, for example, had socialist
friends who had joined the central forum for dissenting voices, the Petőfi Circle.
Although he wanted the system changed he nevertheless dismissed political resistance.
He refused to take part because it would have made him a politically complicit „servant
of the regime‟:
Dezső: They [my friends] were perhaps nearer the regime and
were willing to do things in a conscious way, and I
remember quoting Illyés16
day-in-day-out. He was asked
why he wasn‟t at the forefront of this movement. Illyés‟
answer was, „This is the revolt of the servants, and I was
never a servant.‟ Now I remember my saying this to [my
friends], that, well, you know, I wasn‟t a „cseléd‟
[servant], you know, Litván17
, yes, he was a „cseléd‟, it
was a great thing that he did, but, you know, it wasn‟t
really my business.
12
Whereas conservative respondents presented resistance as inappropriate and shameful,
other respondents celebrated even minor acts of defiance:
Lóránt: There were other things which were a demonstration of
some form of independence. There was certain music, for
example, which was completely prohibited – Wagner was
one – and there were some underground places where
records were played, and one went to these gatherings,
and one felt that there were infiltrators there. One knew
that the fact that one went to these places was reported
somewhere. I saw this really as fumigating myself. It is in
these little things one could assert a degree of heroism.
It‟s a rather petty one, if you see what I mean. And it
didn‟t do any good to anybody else. It didn‟t help
anybody; it didn‟t set a single person free. But we
indulged in this thing proudly.
Interviewees who idealized resistance were mainly from liberal backgrounds, and were
largely confined to those who came from entrepreneurial or professional middle-class
milieux, including many from Jewish families. Although liberalism was a spent political
force by 1945,18
it still remained an important badge of personal identity for many after
the war, associated with the realization of progressive goals, such as land and wealth
redistribution, within the context of a stable democratic system.19
Whereas conservatives
13
related how depoliticized their communities had become, liberals charted how the „anti-
fascist‟ consensus of the post-war democratic system had reinvigorated their engagement
with politics. Their active resistance after 1948 was a result of this reawakening; it was
this progressive democratic system they sought to restore following its destruction by the
Communists:20
James: So what were the politics of your family before the war?
Pál: I think my family was not very political before the war
but we were more political after it…Hungary had been a
very conservative country and I think that the liberal
Jewish middle class didn‟t have a major impact on it, but
certainly between forty-five and forty-eight it looked like
you could have more say…during the early stages of the
[Communist] regime we were trying to guard what
democracy had been achieved during those couple of
post-war years basically.
James: Were you political at that time [under the Communist
regime]?
Pál: Very.
14
James: Were you involved in any way?
Pál: I was involved in some strange ways, on the margins. I
remember giving a speech in 1951 when I graduated, just
before 15 March21
…I‟ve got the original text on the
original piece of paper, which I can show to you, and it
was exceptionally courageous…I don‟t understand how I
dared to say that! And why was I not immediately
suspended?
James: What was the atmosphere like?
Pál: Everyone was astounded…the dean of the school, he put
his arm around me and said, „It was wonderful, but you
have to be very careful because you are not only
endangering yourself and your family, but you are
endangering the school as well.‟
Pál used this story to present resistance as a viable response to the Stalinist state, even
before 1953. He contrasted himself with the rest of society, represented by the hierarchy
of the school, which had become atomized and fearful of expressing opinions. He saw
himself as part of a liberal tradition which took inspiration from the democratic
movements of both 1848 and 1945-8 and which dared to speak to Communist power.
15
Liberals also engaged in greater resistance than other groups because they did not see
themselves as likely victims of an all-powerful state. Unlike conservatives, who avoided
expressing even the smallest forms of dissent for fear of being victimized, they did not
envisage that they would be severely punished for their active opposition. Rózsa, for
example, was involved in an organization that aimed to overthrow the state, should the
opportunity arise:
Rózsa: …[we] did a little bit of propaganda, against the regime,
and a little bit of sabotage…and I would draft
pamphlets…and they would distribute them in the
village, and perhaps I would distribute a couple in Újpest
and just stick them up somewhere. They were little home-
made things; that was the sort of organization. It didn‟t
have a name or anything.
Despite this, she was surprised when two of her colleagues were executed and she herself
received a prison sentence. Even when involved in a terrorist anti-state organization, she
believed that she „hardly did anything‟ and expected that the Communist state would
judge her opposition more fairly:
Rózsa: …I mean I wasn‟t really doing anything, come to think of
it (laughs)…although it was nothing, in objective terms,
16
they hadn‟t done anything at all, in the end two of them
were executed…my husband got a life sentence and I got
fourteen years for that. We hardly did anything.
Whilst liberals engaged in dissenting activities throughout the early Communist period,
the extent to which they resisted at any given time was determined by the opportunities
provided by the system. Before 1953, most felt that open, direct opposition was
impossible. Rather, they engaged in what James C. Scott termed „infrapolitical‟
resistance;22
finding subtle, indirect ways to undermine power that would be difficult to
detect or punish. Liberal respondents reported that they used graffiti, rumour-mongering
and joke-telling:
Dávid: Well for example, there were some serious cases at the
school – the walls always had to be decorated, the
pictures of our leaders were always there…I think on one
occasion we had a special May 1 decoration and the
slogan „Éljen Rákosi‟ was put up and someone in pencil
put an F in front of Éljen, which became Féljen, and
instead of „Long Live Rákosi‟, it said „Rákosi should be
afraid‟, and they were searching the whole school and
questioning students and they never found out who did it.
Of course we knew who did it.
17
Liberals presented the death of Stalin in 1953 as a turning point. Under a weakened state,
they began to form networks of opposition. Army service was often mentioned by men as
an environment in which they discovered that those from other social backgrounds were
equally alienated from the regime. No longer believing that they were isolated in their
anti-Communism, they were spurred on to further oppositional activity:
Ödön: The only place where you could eventually find out
about people‟s real thinking was the army…masks fell
away from a certain number of people and I still
remember how shocked I was when one of these peasant
boys, who owed everything to the Communist Party, told
me once, when we were resting between two bouts of
exercise, „they only have to teach me how to get behind
enemy lines and they will never see me again‟
(laughs)…So, very paradoxically, in the army, where you
suffer from restrictions…we had more freedom there
because people talked to each other, especially when
there was a person-to-person situation. You were sent
out, two people to stand guard in front of the
ammunition…and, you know, between two and four in
the morning you walk up and down there, and you
struggle against sleep and you are much more honest with
each other.
18
Unlike conservatives, liberals‟ idealization of resistance meant that after 1953 they were
prepared to use the greater opportunities available to them under a weakened state to
express new forms of dissent in public places. However, their earlier experience of
„infrapolitical‟ resistance meant that they still disguised their activities to avoid
punishment. Pál hid his new public opposition behind a demonstration which appeared to
be focussing on a non-political sporting issue:
Pál: The first time I protested in the street followed the
Hungarian football team‟s defeat by the West Germans
[in the World Cup Final] in 1954. We decided that we
must pray that the Hungarians be defeated. I should say
that we weren‟t interested in football. I was anxiously
sitting in front of the radio and delighted at every goal
that they let in, because I knew that it might lead to
demonstrations in Budapest…because the Communist
Party so much associated itself with sporting glories, that
when there wasn‟t any glory they had to suffer from
it…and for about half an hour I was walking with the
demonstration demanding the dismissal of the Minister of
Sport, and I do think this was a run-up to the [1956]
uprising.
19
Both liberals and conservatives were opposed to the Communist state after 1948. Yet
whereas conservatives withdrew from political activity, liberals idealized the political
fight against Communism, and found greater room to engage in public resistance after
1953. By contrast, left-wing respondents had a more ambivalent attitude towards the new
regime than either of these groups. Support for leftist ideologies had been growing within
the intellectual and professional middle class since the turn of the century:23
some had
supported the short-lived Communist regime of 1919;24
many more were pushed further
to the left by the political success of right-wing authoritarianism in the inter-war period.25
The experience of wartime German occupation and the Holocaust further radicalized
many younger and Jewish members of the middle class, propelling them towards the
Communist party as the best protection against Fascism‟s return after 1945:26
James: So can you tell me the story of how you joined the
party…who invited you or…
Ádám: I came over from Buda to Pest. Buda was freed a bit later
from the German occupation than Pest. My big task was
how to join a movement that would guarantee to me that
the Germans, those fascists, would not be able to occupy
Hungary again, or at least they would not be backed by
society if something awful was to happen again. So I was
openly looking for left-wing anti-fascist movements…
20
Despite an initial enthusiasm for the Communist party,27
many left-wingers from the
middle class reassessed their support following their experience of show trials, anti-
bourgeois discrimination and the rigidly imposed Soviet Stalinist economic model. Most
had questioned their faith in the Communist state by the early 1950s.28
Before the death
of Stalin, however, they did not view resistance as an appropriate way to express their
opposition.
Prior to 1953, socialists did not oppose Stalinism actively because they were neither
willing nor able to engage with the political sphere. Their alienation from the Communist
movement left most disenchanted with politics and ashamed at having supported an
oppressive system. Sándor was radicalized during his army service where he saw
peasants committing suicide as a result of collectivization. Disillusioned and
embarrassed, he withdrew from politics and „tended his gardens‟:
Sándor: During my army service it became clear what was going
on in the country…I think we succeeded once or twice to
keep the old men from hanging themselves. But then I
thought that that‟s not really what we really want to do,
and kind of decided to „tend my gardens‟. I don‟t think I
decided to fight or oppose or whatever…not, no, I was in
no way political or in any way active until the spring of
1956…I don‟t say that I was in deep mourning when
Joseph Vissarionovich died, but I was shocked, I still
21
thought that Joseph Stalin was the commander of the
liberating armies…but then that‟s typical metropolitan
intellectual „big mouthiness‟…
Their withdrawal from politics was also due to the erosion of their belief that they were
qualified to critique the system effectively. They had internalized the Communist idea
that they were, at best, reformed members of the „former exploiting classes‟, and were
not able to judge the best interests of „the masses‟. Their final disaffection with the
movement was seldom presented as the product of their own experiences; rather, their
stories of departure nearly always focussed on the discovery of the suffering of other
social groups – such as poor peasants (see the above quotation) or the urban working
class – to which the Communist state was expected to provide advantages.
Lastly, socialists refused to express opposition because they were unable to find social
spaces in which to resist the regime in meaningful ways. Liberals were able to find
opportunities for dissent despite the Stalinist state‟s effective control of the public sphere
because they valued „infrapolitical resistance‟ at the margins. For socialists, the only
significant form of resistance was direct, open criticism of abuses of power and such
opportunities were not available to them in the early 1950s.
Socialists began to criticize the regime publicly only after the Stalinist system started to
be dismantled in 1953. Many used stylized anecdotes of an everyday experience which
followed Stalin‟s death in order to illustrate the way in which Hungarian society suddenly
22
had become willing to challenge Communist power. Mihály, a left-leaning respondent
who had turned his back on the party, had been sent to report for radio on a Russian
version of Hamlet. Despite the presence of Révai, the former Minister of Education, at
the theatre, the audience was now prepared to murmur ideologically unacceptable
comments at the Russian actors. The spectators repeated the brutish phrases they
remembered from the Soviet occupation in 1945, thus tarnishing the Communist-
sponsored image of the Red Army as the liberators of Hungary from Fascism:29
Mihály: The big Russian theatres came to Hungary and were
performing Hamlet in Russian and a lot of people were
there. Everybody knew that nobody would understand
anything, but it was packed, and I was there from the
radio. We were behind Révai‟s box and there was a scene
where the ghost is talking to Hamlet and the actor was
just repeating „Gamlet Gamlet!‟30
, and there was an
incredible murmur of „Gamlet, Gamlet, Idi syuda, davai
chasy!‟ [Hamlet, Hamlet, Come Here, Give Me Your
Watch]…everybody in the audience thought they alone
were murmuring that stupid thing, and then the actor also
said, „Gamlet, Gamlet, Idi syuda, davai chasy!‟ That was
the Russians in forty-five: „idi syuda, davai chasy!‟ I‟ll
never forget Révai‟s face; it lengthened and paled. Then
23
the entire audience was whispering, „Gamlet, Gamlet, idi
syuda, davai chasy‟.
Their expression of resistance after 1953 was primarily the result of a re-engagement
with politics. After Stalin‟s death, a new leadership in Moscow insisted that the Stalinist
regime under Rákosi be replaced by a less hard-line government. In July 1953, a
reformist leadership under Imre Nagy began their „New Course‟, a programme which
advocated a more flexible approach to the agricultural and industrial sectors, an end to
the arbitrariness of political persecution and an attempt to gain a limited popular
legitimacy.31
This revitalized socialists‟ faith in the possibilities of Communism and
induced them to re-enter the political sphere. Mátyás, for example, had found his support
for Communism severely shaken following the deportations of relatives and friends
whom he knew to be sincere „anti-fascists‟, but after 1953 had his faith in the possibilities
of Communism restored:
Mátyás: There was the deportation of my relatives, which we were
unbelievably shaken by, but still we disregarded it and
continued to be Communists. But I felt very ashamed
then and to tell you the truth I still do. I was really
ashamed because of that. We didn't support them [the
party]…and it was not very nice, but I‟m sure that this
heightened sense of shame contributed to the fact that,
24
when Imre Nagy came in 1953, we changed very quickly,
if you like, we were on a new road…
Reinvigorated by the possibility of fighting for a more democratic form of Communism,
these respondents were now prepared to resist the attempted re-imposition of hard-line
Stalinism when Rákosi mounted a political comeback in spring 1955. Jenő decided to
confront Rákosi himself at a district meeting of the Communist Party:
Jenő: From 1954 onwards, I was consciously in opposition
within the party. This was especially so when in March
1955 Imre Nagy was relieved of the post of prime
minister…I felt it was necessary to take on the anti-
Stalinist fight against Rákosi, as did my friends…I was
indignant I was going to fight against [Nagy‟s]
marginalization and sacking. Then in the spring of 1956
directly after the Twentieth Party Congress in the Soviet
Union, an unexpected opportunity arose for me to do
something in the interests of this struggle. In the district
where I taught, they informed us about Khrushchev‟s
secret speech and about Stalin‟s crimes being
revealed…They invited me to this [meeting] and
unexpectedly Mátyás Rákosi himself came. He sat there
and listened for an hour and a half to a roll call of Stalin‟s
crimes and nodded his head like this. After this I put my
25
hand up and rose to speak and I said that now there was a
big opportunity internationally to renew the Communist
movement, not on a Stalinist basis but putting the
movement on an entirely new footing. I argued that it
could be done here in Hungary, but the party leadership is
preventing it, because they are holding to past political
errors, and then I spoke out, saying that neither the people
nor the party membership have any more faith in the
present person of the party leader, Comrade Rákosi, who
is sitting beside me…it had a great effect, not just there,
but all over. It wasn‟t in the newspapers, but it spread by
word of mouth throughout Budapest in two days. I
presumed that he would not dare to arrest me, and if he
arrested me he was once again turning against the
people…which would result in a strong movement for his
removal…
In addition, socialists now had public fora in which they were able to criticize power
directly. We should not always assume that greater opportunity is sufficient reason to
explain an outburst of dissent. Socialists withdrew from dissent before 1953 not because
resistance per se was unthinkable, but because the type of resistance they wanted to
express – open, direct and public – was impossible. Such resistance became feasible only
during the increasingly open intellectual environment of Nagy‟s Hungary. At dissident
26
intellectual meetings such as those held by the Petőfi Circle, or at public demonstrations
such as the one which followed the reburial of Rajk,32
socialists discovered the social
spaces in which they thought it appropriate to express opposition. Alajos‟ testimony
illustrated this change; he had initially turned away from the Communist movement in
the early 1950s, disheartened by the lack of intellectual freedom and restrictions on his
travel. However, without any public outlet for his opposition, he decided to „play along‟:
James: So what did you mean by ‘playing along’ in the early
fifties?
Alajos: Oh, it meant that…I was learning Russian properly at
school, and went to meetings of the Young Communist
League…so I mean I didn‟t oppose the regime in any
active sense before 1953, this is clear, before the death of
Stalin…that is, if I had thoughts I noted them down. I
kept a diary. Things which I disagreed with, I wrote them
down in my diary.
Alajos emphasised that for him „real resistance‟ began only in 1956. Unlike liberals, he
had not valued the secret opposition he had engaged in prior to this. Only after the
Twentieth Party Congress in February 1956, where Khrushchev‟s denunciation of
„Stalinist excesses‟ gave reformists license to criticize Stalinism publicly, did his „fun‟
begin:
27
Alajos: Now fun – fun started really in fifty-six after the
Twentieth Congress of the Communist Party, because
then you could actually openly challenge people in
seminars, and not only Hungarian literature
seminars…but in Marxist-Leninist seminars too, you
could say more or less what you thought…I was a
member of the Petőfi Circle… I went to the famous press
debate in the Petőfi Circle which was absolute
pandemonium, I mean, after which, had Rákosi arrested
the five thousand people who were there, he could have
gotten away with it, but he didn‟t have enough power to
do that…on 6 October 1956 you had the Rajk
Reburial…when I was coming out after the speeches…I
saw a little group with a flag and they were sort of
beckoning to me to join in. I joined in, and then I found
somebody…a bloke I knew from the Széchényi library
who said, „Somebody told me there‟s going to be a
demonstration‟. „Where are you going to?‟ „Oh, we‟re
going to Hősök Tere [Heroes‟ Square], and then to the
Batthyány Örökmécses.‟ This is a flame in memory of
Lajós Batthyány who was the Prime Minister of Hungary
in 1849, and was executed.33
This is a kind of place
28
where people go, sort of a „Martyrs‟ Corner‟. All right, so
I joined the group. It wasn‟t particularly political, but we
started producing slogans together…between 1945 and
1948, the Communist party slogan was: „We‟re not going
to stop half-way. Let reaction perish!‟ So we adapted this
slogan, instead of saying „reaction‟ saying „Stalinism‟, so
„We are not going to stop half-way. Let Stalinism perish!‟
And then we shouted over and over, two hundred people,
as we marched with this flag, and people looked at us,
and they didn‟t understand what was going on…I read
out a poem by Atilla József,34
which is a patriotic poem
ending with the words, „So that we shouldn‟t be a
German colony‟, but I read, „So we shouldn‟t be a foreign
colony‟.
The extent and type of resistance respondents expressed was determined as much by
complex social codes that surrounded political engagement as by the opportunities they
had to oppose the state. Despite greater possibilities for opposing the Communist state
after 1953, only socialists and liberals did so. Regardless of opportunities, conservatives
saw political engagement as a form of collaboration and looked to withdraw into the
private sphere. Liberals idealized active opposition as they had been politicized by their
experience of post-war democracy and wished to fight for its return after 1948; they
initially resisted only at the margins, but increasingly found semi-public arenas in which
29
to express dissent after 1953. Despite quickly moving against the Communist state they
had initially supported, socialists refrained from resistance until 1953; only when
politically re-engaged by the hope of reforming the Communist state and given
opportunities for direct, public dissent did they view it as an appropriate activity.
These different attitudes towards resistance continued to shape individuals‟ behaviour
even in October 1956, when Budapest became the epicentre of the most powerful popular
uprising during the early Communist period in central-eastern Europe. The revolt was
initiated by student demonstrations on 23 October, but by the time the uprising was put
down on 4 November a wide spectrum of Hungary‟s urban population had played a role.
The question of social involvement has been a central one both for a range of political
forces since 1956, who have used the social makeup of the resisters to advocate particular
political interpretations of the uprising,35
and for historians, who have attempted to
pinpoint the backgrounds and aims of the revolutionaries. The re-constituted Hungarian
Socialist Workers‟ Party under Kádár manipulated the question of involvement; they
presented the post-1956 Communist state as the saviour of Hungary from a counter-
revolution led by reactionary forces intent on restoring Fascism. In the late 1950s and
early 1960s, historians focussed on the role of dissenting intellectuals and young,
reformist-minded students in starting revolutionary movements.36
In the 1970s, the left-
wing British sociologist Bill Lomax argued that urban workers and their factory councils
were the real embodiment of heroism.37
In the 1970s and 1980s, the dissident socialist
opposition was increasingly united around the image of 1956 as a fight for a more
democratic form of socialism by reform Communist intellectuals. Since 1991, a multi-
30
party democracy has spawned a range of political forces who claim to bear the mantle of
1956: conservative nationalist politicians, for instance, have increasingly presented the
uprising as a „fight for freedom‟ by „ordinary people‟ who took to street fighting in the
name of liberal democracy.38
This resistance-obsessed historiography has produced some
excellent studies of the participation of various social groups. However, there has been
less interest in producing a comparative framework which examines the varied, and often
ambivalent, responses that different groups had to the uprising.
Oral history testimony reflected the debates within Hungary since 1956 about
involvement in the uprising as much as it illustrated participation at the time. On one
hand, respondents‟ narratives demonstrated how mobilization was closely linked with
traditions of resistance within certain social groups. On the other, testimony was strongly
influenced by the widespread idealization of active resistance against the Communist
state in the years since 1956. These two pressures often meant that personal narratives
about 1956 were contradictory or potentially misleading: respondents celebrated the
martyrs of 1956 as heroes whilst condemning their friends who took part, or created
imaginary roles for themselves when they were not involved. Rather than see these
contradictory stories as problematic and inaccurate, they should be viewed as complex
narratives which reveal the ways in which individuals have attempted to reconcile their
own involvement with the ways in which their society now expects the story of 1956 to
be told.
31
Many conservatives idealized the uprising, despite abhorring political resistance before
1956. Bálint characterized it as a „morally clean‟ revolution in which the nation was
unified in struggle. He identified with the aims of the younger generation and workers,
who he argued were the driving forces behind the revolution:
Bálint: It was an absolutely morally clean revolution – we were
there so our impressions were direct ones. There was no
looting…not one single case of looting. It‟s so
unusual…whenever there is an uprising the first thing is
that people go looting…those who took part were all
young people and it was not the intellectuals. Those who
actively took part were not from the political strata but
from the most suppressed ones: workers, young people,
even some from the army or police…They were workers
and simple people…no aristocrats, no noble people who
were deprived of all their fortunes and so on. It was a
spontaneous rising up in favour of something better.
In this quotation, he challenged those who demonized the revolution by questioning its
social makeup, rejecting the Communist-sponsored image of 1956 as a reactionary
aristocratic counter-revolution. He also refuted the left-wing interpretation which
emphasized the role of dissident Communist Party intellectuals in fermenting the
uprising, preferring to identify with the role of the „suppressed‟ and „simple‟ people who
32
spontaneously wanted „something better‟. The revolution was stripped of its political
nuances in order that he could identify with its heroic protagonists. However, when asked
about his own participation, he denied any personal involvement and categorized active
insurgents as collaborators (who were prepared to „adapt to the circumstances‟), from
whom he had tried to distance himself in the aftermath of the revolution:
James : So in 1956, were any of your family or friends involved?
Bálint: No, no, I mean, no close relatives were involved…we did
not have any direct contact to those who were actively
involved…
James: So what do you think the reason was?
Bálint: Well (sighs), we, no one in our family is of a
revolutionary type. I mean, we are not fond of extremities
…We were never involved in politics at all…we were
patriots and Christians…we were considered to be people
who would never give in, we would never fight against
them [i.e the Communists] openly, or demonstrate against
them, carrying posters and banners in the streets. We
simply disliked them and did not believe in them. That‟s
all. So we were not dangerous for them…
33
James: So what did you think of the people who were actively
involved [in the 1956 uprising]?
Bálint: Well, in some cases we tried to understand their situation
[of those who participated in the uprising], about their
motivations, but this did not mean we agreed with
them…They were prepared to adapt themselves to the
circumstances, so they were ready to collaborate to some
extent…Now, especially in the cases of those who were
heavily involved, we tried to minimise contacts with
them.
These respondents now have a divided memory of the events of 1956. They have
accepted the idea, promoted by conservatives in post-Communist Hungary, that 1956 was
a gallant (if tragic) first step in the fight against Communism. In this historically
decontextualized interpretation, the uprising has become a symbol of the fight for
democratic freedoms and national independence which were achieved after 1989. In
conservative collective memory, the reform Communist revolutionary leader Imre Nagy
has been stripped of his socialist past and has come to be remembered primarily as a
nationalist hero.39
On the other hand, this new interpretation clashed with their earlier
abhorrence of resistance and their idealization of inner emigration and political
34
withdrawal. Conservatives therefore found it difficult to construct a coherent narrative
which reconciled these opposing views of the uprising.
Conservatives wished to be seen as reliable witnesses of the courageousness of the
struggle. Yet they often stressed their absence from the uprising, for fear of being seen as
active revolutionaries. Resolving the tension inherent in being an absent yet trustworthy
witness was a central theme of their stories. Mária achieved this by placing herself at the
end of a telephone; it was thus possible for her to give a personalized running account of
the action whilst deflecting any suspicion that she was a participant:
Mária: In the summer of 1956 we really could feel the situation
thawing. I didn‟t want to believe it, when on the
afternoon the 23 October 1956 an acquaintance
telephoned from the city centre and said that the
revolution had broken out, and told us he was going to
tear down the Stalin statue. He worked there at
Damjanich street, where the Stalin statue was. I said that
it couldn‟t have happened, it was impossible. Then on the
following day we realized that revolution had really
broken out, everybody joined together, there was such
peace, there was such love, everybody expressed their
love for everybody else…
35
Where they became involved in the uprising, conservatives did not attempt to hide the
fact: their post-Communist celebration of 1956 has meant that a minimal involvement is
not a source for shame or regret. However, their earlier abhorrence of direct confrontation
continued to shape their narratives: they presented their roles as unintentional and denied
that their actions constituted political resistance. Erzsébet treated the injured Hungarian
fighters and Soviet troops. She portrayed her involvement as neutral (she was
accidentally asked), humanitarian (as she helped both sides equally) and apolitical (she
had no interest in the meaning of the revolution even whilst it was happening). Even
where conservatives found themselves caught up in the uprising, their testimony
confirmed the absence of a culture of political resistance:
Erzsébet: And when the problems started in fifty-six, we acted
together, replacing all those who couldn‟t come in for the
next shift. The medical students who were on the
premises were asked if we could do the normal shift
work…my husband became the ambulance man and I
was the assistant – so we transported the injured,
whatever their origin. We picked up Hungarians,
Russians. Anybody who was injured, we treated them
equally.
James: Can you tell me some more of your experiences of that?
36
Erzsébet: At that time you didn't try to analyse anything, you just
had a task to perform, and didn't ask why I am doing this,
what the future might bring, it didn‟t enter the thought
process…there was a lack of interest in political
happenings, and political life, I suppose, at that time, as
well.
Unlike conservative respondents, liberals and socialists did not find the presentation of
their own involvement in the 1956 uprising problematic. They lived in a political culture
which idealized active resistance during 1956, and are now part of a post-Communist
culture which also celebrates participation in the uprising. They therefore pushed
involvement in the uprising to the forefront of their narratives. One socialist respondent
gave himself a crucial role in the uprising, claiming that he had started it by
marginalizing the importance of another demonstration:
Alajos: I was one of the organizers of the student demonstration
on 23 October 1956…I – actually, four of us – started the
organization on the 22 October…I was the one who stood
up for the demonstration at the faculty. There were two
groups which demonstrated the next day. One of them
started from the Petőfi statue, the other group started in
Buda from the Műegyetem [Polytechnic], marching to the
Bem statue, but without slogans, that was a silent
37
demonstration. Our demonstration was the real one in a
sense, because we shouted slogans and people knew what
we wanted, and I was the person who actually said to
about ten thousand people, „Okay, start!‟ (laughs). So my
wife sometimes says, „My husband started the Hungarian
revolution!‟
Lóránt, a liberal, presented himself as a revolutionary hero whose resistance activities
prior to 1956 had prepared him for a role in the uprising as a member of a revolutionary
Workers‟ Council and organizer of a potential armed insurgency:
James: So what other things would constitute your own personal
heroism?
Lóránt: …I don‟t think I was a great hero until about late fifty-
five when there was this general livening up of things,
and there was the Petőfi Kör and I was fairly active there.
By that time I was working in industry. At the place
where I worked I organized a small group and taught
them English which was definitely a non-official thing to
do. During the actual events of 1956, I was quite active in
the middle of Budapest, and also in this factory where I
worked and there I was elected a member of the Workers‟
38
Council. We also organized, we made trenches, and we
collected weapons, and then we got in touch with some
secret groups which used to belong to the Hungarian
army…
Some respondents from these backgrounds invented narratives of involvement, despite
not having taken part in the uprising. There was no intended deception; their fictional
nature was made explicit. Rather, these imaginary stories should be read a manifestation
of liberal and socialist identity; stories of active political opposition were considered
more important than what one actually did. Viktor‟s well thought-out narrative about
what he might have done was more important to him than what had actually happened:
Viktor: If I had been in Budapest at the time, on 22 or 23
October, I‟m sure that I would have joined up with the
university students, even if I was working.
James: So how…. why do you think you would have been
involved in the demonstration on 23 October?
Viktor: Because I‟ve always been a little bit, sort of,
revolutionary. I like to be different, you know…I never
considered myself a courageous man who would have
been on the barricades on the front line in the Corvin Köz
39
[Corvin Alley].40
But I would have been involved,
definitely, I would have been involved, not because I feel
I‟m a revolutionary, but I‟m a bit of a free thinker. You
know what I mean. And I don‟t really like to comply all
the time and get put into a melting pot and be the same as
the others.
Regardless of whether individual respondents were involved, all liberals and socialists
testified to cultures of resistance which had been built up in the years preceding the
revolution and led to a very rapid mobilization against the Communist state. By contrast,
conservatives, even during the first great challenge to Communist power in central-
eastern Europe, still considered direct political confrontation abhorrent. Their celebration
of 1956 was the result only of a later nationalist idealization of anti-Communist
resistance.
In the immediate post-Fascist and post-Communist periods, stories of resistance to the
previous regime have come to dominate history writing and have been shaped by the
political needs of new states. For instance, historians in post-war West and East Germany
sought to use resistance stories to legitimate their new state and demonize the other
across the Iron Curtain. Western historians presented their republic as the inheritor of
conservative resistance against Nazism and its population as untainted by support for
fascism; in the east, by contrast, the Communist state presented itself as the heirs of
Communist anti-Fascist resistance, and West Germany as the refuge for supporters of
40
Hitler‟s regime.41
A similar phenomenon has emerged in post-Communist central-eastern
Europe. At the sitting of the first post-Communist Hungarian parliament, the following
declaration preceded all business: „The Uprising of 1956 laid the foundation for the hope
that it is possible to achieve a democratic social order, and that no sacrifice for our
country‟s independence is made in vain. Although the ensuing suppression reinstated the
old power structure, it could not eradicate the spirit of 1956 from people‟s minds.‟ Just as
the two post-war Germanies erased those traditions of resistance which did not help to
legitimate their new states, so the varied motives for dissent in Hungary were forgotten
and the story of resistance shaped into a struggle whose inevitable outcome was the
liberal democratic state in 1989.42
The obsession with heroic confrontation serves to reinforce ahistorical, post-Communist
celebrations of dissent; we should develop a comparative social history which transcends
the narrow demands of post-1989 national historiographies and instead addresses the
wide variety of strategies that people used to live in opposition. Although groups from
across the Hungarian political spectrum now celebrate active involvement in the 1956
uprising, at the time there existed vastly differing ideas about how to live under
illegitimate power; some asserted the need to confront the state directly, whilst others
believed that withdrawal into an apolitical private existence was more appropriate.
Yet, in general, new social histories have not yet challenged the established stories of
monolithic heroic resistance in central-eastern Europe; in Poland, for example, dominant
narratives still stress the ability of unified working-class resistance to reach across
41
political and class divides and become a mouthpiece for Polish society as a whole.43
Superficially, at least, Polish resistance appeared much less politically fractured than in
Hungary. Firstly, the country was not divided by the experience of a collaborationist state
during the Second World War. Secondly, researchers have noted that amongst the Polish
working class there existed a social memory of shared persecution by outsiders (the
Jewish-German middle class of the interwar era, the wartime German occupation and
then the post-war Soviet occupation) that shaped a collective sense of class and national
interest to be defended.
Yet some studies have started the attempt to dismantle the idea of monolithic societal
resistance and investigate the range of strategies used by Poles. Despite widespread
opposition, some revisionist scholars have begun to address why certain groups decided
to accommodate themselves to the Communist state.44
Others have examined how social
divides between different dissenters shaped very different approaches to resistance. In
particular, some studies have emphasized the role of gender; for example, male protesters
in heavy industry and shipbuilding frequently stressed the role of men in defending
Poland and Polish workers‟ rights, and deliberately excluded women from public
confrontation with the state. By contrast, some women viewed male, working-class
protest as a form of collaboration as it accepted the state‟s assumptions that only labour
issues were a legitimate cause for confrontation whereas domestic and consumer issues
were not. These women chose very different (and often more successful) strategies to
express their opposition.45
Only by removing ourselves from the demands of the post-
Communist celebration of dissent, by accepting the overwhelming absence of open
42
protest against Communist states, and by addressing the variety of valid ways in which
people chose to live in opposition, can we hope to create a sophisticated social history of
resistance in central-eastern Europe.
University of Exeter JAMES MARK
I would like to express my gratitude to the interviewees who shared their experiences of
Communism; to the Arts and Humanities Research Board and the Economic and Social
Research Council for D.Phil. and postdoctoral funding respectively; and to Robert Evans,
Richard Crampton, Tim Rees, Martha Lampland, Matthew Wright and the English
Historical Review referees for reading earlier drafts of the piece and providing valuable
comments.
1 On the way in which different groups in post-Communist Hungary have competed to
claim anti-Communist resistance as their own, see H. Nyyessön, The Presence of the Past
in Politics: „1956‟ after 1956 in Hungary (Jyväskylä, 1999), pp.178-81, 245-51.
2 For the attempted revival of fascist „anti-Communist‟ heroes in post-Communist
Hungary, see I. Rév, „Counterrevolution‟, in S. Antohi and V. Tismaneanu (eds.),
Between Past and Future: The Revolutions of 1989 and Their Aftermath (Budapest,
2000). On the rehabilitation of the rightist Marshal Antonescu as the protector of the
Romanian nation from Communism, see M. Temple, „The Politicisation of History:
Marshal Antonescu and Romania‟, Eastern European Politics and Societies, x (1996),
457-503.
43
3On the inability of János Kádár, the leader of the reconstituted Hungarian Socialist
Workers‟ Party after 1956, to utter the name of the leader of the 1956 uprising, see I.
Rév, „The Necronym‟, Representations, lxiv (1998), 78-108.
4 For an academic call not to see society as a homogeneous force for resistance, see R.S.
Watson (ed.), Memory, History and Opposition Under State Socialism (Santa Fe, 1994)
especially the introduction.
5 Ekiert states, for instance, „contemporary research on collective protest convincingly
demonstrates that political mobilisation [of „society‟] is shaped by the structure of
political opportunities offered by the state…‟; G. Ekiert, The State Against Society:
Political Crises and their Aftermath in East Central Europe (Princeton, 1996), p.5. See
also J. C. Scott, Domination and the Arts of Resistance (New Haven and London, 1990);
despite providing one of the most subtle and provoking analyses of resistance, he
assumes it to be a natural response to repressive power. For him, people do not resist
because they are weak and „atomised‟, not because they deliberately chose to withdraw
from confrontation.
6 An exception is J. Staniszkis, The Ontology of Socialism (Oxford, 1992), pp.127-31.
See also J.K. Coetzee and H. Otakar, „Oppression, Resistance and Imprisonment‟ in K. L.
Rogers, S. Leydesdorff and G. Dawson, Trauma and Life Stories. International
Perspectives (London and New York, 1999), pp.80-94. They compare examples of South
African and Czechoslovak persecution under apartheid and Communism respectively,
analysing why South Africans saw the suffering in their lives as a basis for political
action, whereas Czechs did not.
44
7 In this article, the term „middle class‟ refers to those who came from the inter-war
middle class (prior to its formal destruction by the Communists in 1948). It includes
those from intellectual/professional backgrounds, the economically independent
bourgeoisie, and civil servants. It excludes those from the „lower-middle class‟ such as
clerks and shopkeepers. For this definition, see G. Gyáni and G. Kövér, Magyarország
Társadalom Története. A Reformkortól a Második Világháborúig (Budapest, 1998),
pp.224-54.
8 For an account of the mixture of discrimination and opportunity experienced by the
middle classes, see J. Mark, „Discrimination, Opportunity and Middle Class Success in
early Communist Hungary‟, Historical Journal, forthcoming June 2005.
9 In the 1930s, those of Jewish origin constituted 50% of merchants, 60% of the legal
profession, and 44% of doctors, but only 5% of public servants.
10 For how fear of Bolshevism after 1917 pushed the European middle class to the right,
see C. Wrigley, The Red Menace. The Russian Revolution and Europe, Modern History
Review, v (1994), 20-23. For the idea that the Hungarian middle class „sold out‟ to right-
wing authoritarianism, see F. Erdei, Selected Writings, ed. T. Huszár (Budapest, 1988),
pp.45-54; G. Szekfű, Három Nemzedék és Ami Utána Következik (Budapest, 1935); for
a critique of this idea, see Gyáni and Kövér, Magyarország Társadalom Története,
pp.224-7.
11 The Stalinist system, characterized by the use of extreme state power to effect rapid
industrialization, the collectivization of agriculture and the marginalization of political
opponents, lasted between 1949 and 1953. The period of „destalinization‟, during which a
new Communist elite attempted to correct the extremes of this initial period, establish a
45
limited popular legitimacy and put national interests above Soviet ones, lasted between
1953 and 1956.
12 G. Gyarmati, J. Botos, T. Zinner and M. Korom, Magyar Hétköznapok Rákosi Mátyás
Két Emigrációja Között 1945-1956 (Budapest, 1988), pp.114-20; G. Gyarmati, „Harc a
közigazgatás birtoklásáért. A koalíción belül pártküzdelmek az 1946. évi hatalmi
dualizmus időszakában‟ in Századok, iii (1996), 497-570. Some 100,000 people were „b-
listed‟ in the workplace and were thus deprived of the right to gain public employment or
vote; Gyarmati argues that this included not only fascists but also many members of the
centre-right Smallholders‟ Party. About one in ten adult males suffered some type of
punitive exclusion in Hungary in the immediate post-war years. See L. Karsai, „The
People‟s Courts and Revolutionary Justice in Hungary 1945-46‟, in I. Deák, J.T. Gross,
and T. Judt, The Politics of Retribution in Europe. World War Two and Its Aftermath
(Princeton, 2000), p.233.
13 Between May and July 1951, 14,000-15,000 members of the old upper and middle
classes were deported from their homes in Hungary‟s major cities and resettled in the
area around Hortobágy, where they were forced to become menial workers.
14 On the inability of the post-war political system to integrate the moderate conservative
middle class, see I. Bibó, „The Crisis of Hungarian Democracy‟, in id., Democracy,
Revolution, SelfDetermination (New York, 1991), pp. 107-8. See also M. Szabó,
„Magyar nemzettudat-problémák a huszadik század második felében‟, in N. Fokasz and
A. Örkény (eds.), Magyarország Társadalomtöténete 1945-89 (Budapest, 1999), vol. 2,
p.304. He blamed „másik Magyarország‟ (the „other‟, conservative, Hungary) for its
46
failure to integrate itself with a new, „progressive‟ Hungary and for their continued
idealisation of the Horthy period.
15 For the importance of Hungarian churches in maintaining conservative outlooks under
Communism, see J. Wittenberg, „Did Communism Matter? Explaining Political
Continuity and Discontinuity‟, Ph.D. diss. (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1999),
pp.160-86.
16 A populist writer, famous for his account of rural poverty in Hungary in the 1930s
(„People of the Puszta‟), who became an outspoken critic of Stalinism.
17 At a Budapest 13
th district Communist Party meeting conducted immediately after
Khrushchev‟s Secret Speech denouncing Stalin‟s errors, György Litván suggested to
Rákosi that he should resign. For Litván‟s own account, see „A Nagy Imre-csoport
kialakulása és tevékenysége 1955. április-1956.július‟, Társadalmi Szemle, vi (1992), 89-
95.
18 Z. L. Nagy, The Liberal Opposition in Hungary 1919-45 (Budapest, 1983), p.30; I.
Bibó, „Crisis‟, pp.134-6. In the Budapest municipal elections of 7 October 1945, the
liberal Civic Democratic Party (Polgári Demokrata Párt) received only 3.83% of the vote.
19 Nagy, Liberal Opposition, p.13; she states that „middle class radicalism as a political
trend was ousted from public life, and its remaining adherents withdrew into the sphere
of arts, publishing houses and editorial offices of periodicals‟.
20 There exists a disagreement between conservatives and the liberal-left in Hungary over
whether the period 1945-8 constituted a „real‟ democracy that had the potential to thrive
before the Communist takeover in 1948, or a „fake‟ one that was merely a cover for the
increasing power of the Communist Party. For the conservative view, see I. Romsics,
47
Hungary in the Twentieth Century (Budapest, 1999), pp.219-20. For the opposing
interpretation, see C. Gati, „Eastern Europe before Cominform. The Democratic Interlude
in Post-War Hungary‟ in Survey, xxviii (1984), 99-134. The liberal-left and conservatives
of course experienced the period differently, as many of the latter were excluded from
participation in post-war political life.
21 15 March was the anniversary of the outbreak of the 1848 Hungarian revolution against
the Hapsburgs; it had historical resonance as a symbol of the fight for national
independence during the Communist period.
22 Scott, Domination, ch. 7. One analysis has suggested that this „infra-political‟
resistance was also practised within industrial working-class communities in this period;
M. Pittaway, „Industrial Workers, Socialist Industrialisation and the State in Hungary,
1948-1958‟, Ph.D. thesis (University of Liverpool, 1998), pp.327-33.
23 F. Mucsi, „A polgári radikalizmus Magyarországon 1900-1914‟, Történelmi Szemle,
xx (1977), 280-314; T. Huszár, Nemzetlét-Nemzettudat-Értelmiség (Budapest, 1984),
pp.150-186.
24 For criticism of the middle classes‟ role in the Communist revolution of 1919, see O.
Jászi, Revolution and Counter-revolution in Hungary (Westminster, 1924), pp.115-17.
25 Nagy, Liberal Opposition, p.30; M.M. Kovács, Liberal Professions and Illiberal
Politics. Hungary from the Habsburgs to the Holocaust (Oxford, 1994), p.42. On the way
in which anti-Semitic discrimination in the inter-war period pushed many Jewish
intellectuals towards socialism (rather than Zionism), see M. Lackó, „A Zsidó Értelmiség
a Holocaust Előtt‟, Magyar Tudomány, xxxix (1994), 651-8.
48
26
For an exploration of the way in which the fear of fascism fuelled left-wing radicalism
in Hungary after 1945, see Bibó, „Crisis of Hungarian Democracy‟, p.89.
27 On the appeal of radical left-wing ideology in post-war Hungary, see C. Gati,
„Modernisation and Communist Power in Hungary‟, East European Quarterly, x (1971),
325-59.
28 On the way in which Communist intellectuals turned against the state, see T. Aczél and
T.Méray, Revolt of the Mind (London, 1960). See also personal accounts of this period,
such as I.T.Berend, A Történelem- Ahogyan Megéltem (Budapest, 1997); A. Hegedüs,
Történelem és a Hatalom Igézetében : Életrajzi Elemzések (Budapest, 1988).
29 On the use of jokes in confronting power, see L. Passerini, Fascism in Popular
Memory. The Cultural Experience of the Turin Working Class (London, 1984), pp.68-80.
30 The Russian pronunciation of „Hamlet‟.
31 For an outline of Imre Nagy‟s role as reformer, see J. M. Rainer, Nagy Imre. Politikai
Életrajz II. 1953-8 (Budapest, 1999), pp.9-140.
32 In 1949, László Rajk, the former Communist minister of the interior, was arrested, put
on trial and then executed. Following Khrushchev‟s criticisms of Stalin‟s crimes, he was
rehabilitated; his official reburial on 6 October 1956 subsequently became a focal point
for dissent.
33 An „eternal flame‟ was constructed by Hungarian nationalists in 1926 to the memory of
Lajós Batthyány, who was executed as prime minister of Hungary during the war for
independence against Austria in 1848-9; see J.W.Mason, „Hungary‟s Battle for Memory‟,
History Today, l/iii (2000), 28-34.
49
34
A poet and journalist who joined the Communist party in 1930. He was soon expelled,
committed suicide in 1937, but his work was later appropriated by the Communist state.
35 For surveys of the multiple meanings of the 1956 uprising, see G. Litván, „A Forty-
Year Perspective on 1956‟, in T. Cox (ed.), Hungary 1956 – Forty Years On (London,
1997), pp.14-25; Nyyessön, Presence of the Past; J. M. Rainer, „Múltunk Kritikus
Kérdései – 1956‟, in Élet és Irodalom, 16 June 2000, 9-10.
36 P. E. Zinner, Revolution in Hungary (New York and London, 1962), ch. 8; P.
Kecskemeti, The Unexpected Revolution: Social Forces in the Hungarian Uprising
(Stanford, 1961); F. Váli, Rift and Revolt in Hungary. Nationalism versus Communism
(Oxford, 1961); Aczél and Méray, Revolt.
37 B. Lomax, Hungary 1956 (London, 1976), pp.17-18; B. Lomax (ed.), Hungarian
Workers‟ Councils in 1956 (New York, 1990), pp.xxi-xxiii.
38 For the role played by lower middle-class and working-class street fighters in
Budapest, see Litván, „A Forty-Year Perspective‟, p.21; G. Pongrátz, Corvin Köz 1956
(Chicago, 1982); L. Eörsi, Ferencváros 1956: A kerület fegyveres csoportjai (Budapest,
1997).
39 For the changing political meanings associated with Imre Nagy, see K.P. Benziger,
„The Funeral of Imre Nagy. Contested History and the Power of Memory Culture‟,
History and Memory, xii (2000), 142-58 at 155-8; I. Rév, „Parallel Autopsies‟,
Representations, xlix (1995), 15-39 at 323.
40 A street running off the main boulevard in Pest where young Hungarian men and boys
engaged the Red Army in some of the most brutal street fighting.
50
41
See B. Niven, Facing the Nazi Past. United Germany and the Legacy of the Third
Reich (London, 2002), pp.62-74.
42 This has been a complaint of those from left-wing backgrounds who fought in the
uprising for a reformed, more humane version of socialism, rather than for a „bourgeois‟
liberal democracy: “While in the past most of the friends of the Hungarian revolution
emphasized its socialistic and democratic features and its enemies pointed out the
bourgeois characteristics, nowadays many politicians and even a few historians want to
strip the socialist clothing from 56…[they believe that] the people rejected every form of
socialism, and it was only a question of time that the genuine, conservative or bourgeois
character of the revolution would prevail.”, György Litván, qu. in Nyyessön, Presence of
the Past, p.248.
43 P. Kenney, „The Gender of Resistance in Communist Poland‟, American Historical
Review, civ (1999), 399-425 at 399-400.
44 D. Jarosz, „How Poles coped with History (1944-1989). Polish History and Problems
with National Identity 1944-1989‟ in A. Pók, J. Rüsen and J. Scherrern (eds.), European
History: Challenge for a Common Future (Hamburg, 2002), pp.45-53, especially the